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Why this mother of three hates a new liberal TikTok trend

A mother of three who lives with alopecia has spoken out against liberal women's decision to shave their heads to appear “unattractive” to men in protest of the 2024 presidential election results. chant and became a hot topic on social media.

Following President-elect Donald Trump's victory over current Vice President, many Kamala Harris supporters have joined the South Korean radical movement amid frustrations with gender inequality, pay disparities, and violence against women. adopted the ideology of the feminist 4B movement.

“They're like, 'We're shaving our heads to make us less attractive,'” Jessica Yang, a mother from Dallas, Texas, told Fox News Digital in a video interview. “That morning, all the emotions I'd been feeling from dealing with hair loss instantly came to the surface.”

The movement, also known as the “Four No's,” began with a message for women to boycott or refuse heterosexual relationships, dating, marriage, and childbearing.

Liberal women in America are uniting to cut off intimate relationships with men for the next four years.

In the middle of the night, Yang learned about the feminist friendship show through TikTok, and when she logged in, all she saw was a video of a bare scalp.

Jessica Yang, who suffers from alopecia, is “shocked” that liberal women on TikTok have started shaving their heads in the wake of Trump's victory. TikTok/@soulqueen514

“There was a video of a mother discussing how she should encourage her younger daughter to shave. [her] Head,” Yang said.

Ms. Yang scrolled through video after video of women begging each other to look less desirable to men.

That was enough for Yang, an Oklahoma native, so she decided to post her own video.

“Stop it,” Yang said in the viral video. “Stop. There are people like me who have lost their hair and it's very shocking.”

Following the election of President Trump, liberal women adopted the “Four No's” that reject heterosexual relationships, dating, marriage, and childbearing. Reuters

“You all claim to be so caring and kind, but look what you're doing,” she continued. “You don't realize you're causing cancer in people who have lost their hair.”

The video quickly gained traction, receiving 2.8 million views and 16,000 comments on TikTok.

“Thank you,” one social media user wrote in the comments section, adding: “My wife has cancer and is undergoing chemotherapy and is now completely bald.”

Another user empathized with Yang, adding that he lost his wife to breast cancer at the age of 32.

His wife was devastated by her hair loss.

“She was so beautiful,” he wrote. “So do you. I miss her. They don't have a clue.”

Social media sites of liberal women wielding scissors and razors have mushroomed, but most of the videos appear to have been deleted.

“I woke up this morning feeling spicy,” one woman said in a spliced ​​TikTok video while shaving her head. “Have I given up on America? I have. Also, I've given up on dying this hair. Fk I'm dying my hair. I had my hair made long and gorgeous. It's all F–K. It's hot, isn't it? Everything that the patriarchy wants us to do, it doesn't give us anything.”

Ms. Yang was upset that women shaved their heads “to make them look bad.” TikTok/@soulqueen514

“I'm also speaking to you, the women who have the internalized misogyny necessary to do what you did,” she continued. “A minority of people who are so afraid of women in power that they befriend and feed from white men in case a crumb falls from their plate.”

“That's not what we should be doing,” Yang said. “Especially if we live in a world where we want young people to be kind.”

Yang told Fox News Digital that while she doesn't identify with the movement and doesn't feel the same way about the results, her reaction to the video hinders how liberal women react to the election results. He said it was not.

“Can I keep using the blue bracelet?” Yang asked. “Is it okay to be bald and unattractive?”

Yang said she worries that children diagnosed with cancer may be inadvertently exposed to untouchable commentary. TikTok/@soulqueen514

Yang said she is Native American and likened the long, flowing hair she lost to Pocahontas' hair.

“It hurt a lot because I already feel like I'm not very attractive,” Yang said.

As an adult woman, Yang says she can “overcome” the lack of awareness.

However, she expressed concern about children diagnosed with cancer being inadvertently exposed to unmentioned comments.

“Sometimes there are children who have cancer and still have to go to school,” Yang said. “There are moms who are going through chemotherapy and are losing their hair and still have to show up and do everything to be a mom, and then there are people like me who have alopecia. ”

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